| Literature DB >> 34966343 |
Chan-Lin Chu1,2, Yu-Cheng Chu2,3, Chee-Tat Lam4, Tsong-Hai Lee2,5, Shih-Chao Chien2,6, Chih-Hua Yeh2,7, Yi-Ming Wu7, Ho-Fai Wong7.
Abstract
Background: Tentorial dural arteriovenous fistula is a rare subtype of intracranial dural arteriovenous fistula (DAVF) with a deteriorating natural course, which may be attributed to its pial angioarchitecture. TDAVF often harbors feeders arising from pial arteries (FPAs). Reports have revealed that, if these feeders are not obliterated early, the restricted venous outflow during the embolization process may cause upstream congestion in the fragile pial network, which increases the risk of hemorrhagic complications. Because most reported cases of TDAVF were embolized through feeders from non-pial arteries (FNPAs), little is known of the feasibility of direct embolization through FPAs.Entities:
Keywords: Onyx; arteriovenous fistula; pial anastomosis; tentorial; transarterial embolization
Year: 2021 PMID: 34966343 PMCID: PMC8710483 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.736919
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Tentorial dural arteriovenous fistula of case 1. (A) Brain magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) revealed serpentine vessels at the quadrigeminal cistern. Angiograms of (B) left external carotid artery (ECA), (C) left vertebral artery (VA), (D) right external carotid artery, and (E,F) right internal carotid artery (ICA) revealed that the feeding arteries were the left middle meningeal artery, bilateral occipital arteries, right marginal tentorial artery, bilateral artery of Davidoff and Schechter (ADS), and left artery of falx cerebelli. (G) Three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction of right ADS, which was superselected (H) for embolization. Total obliteration of fistula confirmed through postprocedural angiogram from (I) right ICA, (J) left ECA, and (K,L) left VA.
Figure 2Tentorial dural arteriovenous fistula of case 2. (A) Brain computed tomography revealed diffuse subarachnoid hemorrhage. Angiograms of (B) left vertebral artery (VA) and (C) right external carotid artery. The feeders were the bilateral superior cerebellar arteries (SCAs), bilateral occipital arteries, and left posterior meningeal artery. (D) 3D reconstruction of the fistula. Embolization was performed after navigation of a microcatheter from right SCA to the (E) varix in the draining vein, with most of the fistula being obliterated. The microcatheter then approached the fistula from (F) the left SCA for further embolization; (G) inadvertent flowback of the embolizer to the SCA orifice was noted (arrows). (H) Post-embolization angiogram of left VA injection. (I,J) Follow-up brain MRA revealed acute infarction at tegmentum and tectum of left midbrain and left superior cerebellum.
Figure 3Tentorial dural arteriovenous fistula of case 3. (A) Brain computed tomography revealed fourth-ventricle intraventricular hemorrhage. (B,C) 3D reconstruction of cerebral angiogram revealed the fistula was supplied by medial tentorial branches of bilateral SCAs and drained into vein of Galen through a varix. Notably, a stricture was present at the venosinus junction. Embolization was performed from (D) left and (E) right dural branches of SCAs. Post-embolization angiogram from (F,G) right vertebral artery revealed total obliteration of the fistula.
Reported TDAVF patients embolized directly through the pial artery.
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| This study | 57 | M | PCA (R) | Galenic | Left limbs numbness and weakness, left facial burning sensation | SCA (B) | Vein of Galen | IIa+b | None |
| 49 | F | SCA (B) | Galenic | SAH | SCA (B), posterior meningeal artery (L), OA (B) | Vein of Galen, varix | IIa+b | SCA territory infarction | |
| 67 | M | SCA (B) | Galenic | IVH | MMA (R), marginal tentorial artery (R), bilateral ADSs, falx cerebelli artery (L) | Vein of Galen, varix, cerebellar cortical veins | IIa+b | None | |
| Huang et al. ( | 42 | M | PCA (L) | Galenic | SAH/IVH | PCA, OA, MHT, MMA | Vein of Galen, varix | III | None |
| 65 | M | SCA (L) | Galenic | SAH | SCA (L), MHT (R), OA (L), APA | Perimesencephalic Vein of Galen | III | Microcatheter retention | |
| Wu et al. ( | 48 | M | PCA (L) | Galenic | IVH | PCA, MMA, OA, PMA, MHT | Vein of Galen, Basal vein of Rosenthal | IV | None |
| Zhang et al. ( | 60 | M | SCA (L) | Tentorium cerebelli | ICH | Bilateral MMA, SCA (L) | Basal vein of Rosenthal, dilated | IV | SCA territory infarction |
| 41 | M | PCA (L) | Tentorium cerebelli | ICH | PCA (L) | Basal vein of Rosenthal, varix | IV | SCA territory infarction |
ADS, artert of Davidoff and Schechter; APA, ascending pharyngeal artery; ICH, intracerebral hemorrhage; IVH, intraventricular hemorrhage; MHT, meningohypophyseal trunk; MMA, middle meningeal artery; OA, occipital artery; PCA, posterior cerebral artery; PMA, posterior meningeal artery; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage; SCA, superior cerebellar artery.